The Fluid Fertilizer Foundationis the Research and Education Arm
of the Fluid Industry.

When you belong to the FFF, you’ll have access to all of the current trends and breakthroughs in fluid fertilizer technology, to give your business a competitive edge in today’s rapidly changing industry!

The Fluid Fertilizer Foundation provides research and educational funding for continued improvement in the application and efficiency of fluid fertilizers in all programs.

Latest Posts

Dr. Raun Lohry has been named as President of the Fluid Fertilizer Foundation following their annual meeting February 19-20, 2018 in Scottsdale, AZ. He will succeed Dr. Dale Leikam who is stepping down after servings as President of the Foundation for the past 10 years. Dr. Lohry has considerable technical… Read more

Ammonium polyphosphate solution (APP, 10-34-0, 11-37-0) is the most common liquid P fertilizer material in the U.S. today. While 10-34-0 is the most common grade of APP solution, 11-37-0 is also found in some markets. While the following comments reference 10-34-0, most comments are applicable to 11-37-0 as well. The… Read more

Welcome to the Fluid Fertilizer Foundation!

Founded in 1982 by the National Fertilizer Solutions Association, the FFF is supported entirely by dealers, distributors and manufacturers of fluid fertilizers and equipment.

About the Fluid Fertilizer Foundation

Audience

Since 1982, the Fluid Fertilizer Foundation has served, educated, and empowered a wide variety of agricultural professionals:

The Fluid Journal features case studies, news and research, with over two decades of valuable research in its archives!

Fluid Research

The Fluid Fertilizer Foundation is the only organization with a mandate for fluid research. We have invested over $3 million in research projects selected by industry personnel. We pool our resources to do collectively what can’t be done individually.

Our research has helped improve traditional fertility programs and is evidenced by an increase in fluid fertilizer consumption from 13 million tons in 1982 to over 20 million tons today – while producing a ripple effect on research at universities around the world, including U.S., Canada, Mexico, and Australia.